The small white helicopter had
landed in a fi eld just behind the
Léogane police station. Thousands of
Haitians had gathered around with a
mixture of curiosity and anticipation.
This was the fi rst helicopter to land,
despite many fl ying over the town in
the previous days. But shortly after
landing, the helicopter lifted off again
and began to circle above the fi eld at
about 150 feet. Then a door popped
open and someone inside began
throwing out small bags.
One of the bags fl uttered down
and landed high up in a tall tree’s
branches. Another bag plopped down
in the police station’s backyard,
where dozens of young community
leaders were hovering around a
cluster of bigwigs meeting with Léogane’s
Mayor Santos and an offi cial
from Haiti’s Interior Ministry.
The bag contained brown bread
rolls. When the young community
leaders saw this, they erupted with
rage.
“This is a complete outrage,”
said Alex Estimé, a young man who
had spent the last week organizing
his neighborhood to dig out bodies
from the rubble of the town where
an estimated 80% of the buildings
have been destroyed. “This is pure
humiliation. An earthquake is a
misfortune which could befall any
country. Would they treat other people
like this? No. It is like they are
throwing bones to dogs. We don’t
want their stinking bread.” With that
he stamped on the bag. Other men
around him also kicked it.
The men shook their fi sts and
hurled invective at the small white
helicopter which continued to circle
in the sky, raining down the small
bags of bread. Miguel Joseph, a
community leader and director of a
town radio station, said the aid delivery
was the work of the Mormon
Church.
“This type of aid distribution
is totally unacceptable,” said Max
Mathurin, the former head of the
Provisional Electoral Council that
carried out the 2006 elections. Born
and raised in Léogane, he was one of
those meeting with the mayor.
“Over the past week, I petitioned
repeatedly for a backhoe that
could have helped excavate people
from under rubble and saved lives,”
he lamented. “I couldn’t even get
something as simple as that from
our government or the UN. That was
the injury. Now this helicopter is the
insult.”
In many ways, the allegedly
Mormon helicopter dropping food
was emblematic of the way the United
States and United Nations are carrying
out relief to the Haitian people.
Léogane was only fi ve miles from
the epicenter of the 7.0 magnitude
quake and probably had the most
extensive damage of any Haitian
city. But earlier that day, the United
Nations had announced that it could
not bring relief to Léogane until it
had established security.“I don’t know what security
they need to establish,” responded
Roland St. Fort, 32, another one of
the town’s neighborhood leaders.
“There have been no riots here. The
people have been very disciplined.
They set up their own security
around their outdoor camps.”
Throughout the capital, where
security is presumably being established,
thousands of troops from the
U.N. Mission to Stabilize Haiti (MINUSTAH)
continue to ride around
the capital in armored vehicles,
pointing their guns at Haitians, just
as they did before the quake. U.N.
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon announced
the deployment of another
3,500 to complement the 9,000 already
in Haiti.
In addition, 12,000 U.S. soldiers
were deployed in Haiti this
week. The 82nd Airborne put the
General Hospital (HUEH) in lockdown
when they arrived on Jan.
19, turning away victims, family
members and journalists for about
an hour until hospital administrators
intervened to have them relax their
conduct. Wielding M-16s in front of
the hospital gates, they managed to
increase chaos rather than diminish
it by yelling orders in English at Haitians
trying to enter the state hospital
they theoretically own. Many
were people in need of care or family
members bringing food for hospital
patients. The hospital’s kitchen, located
next door to the stench-emitting
morgue, is still closed.In counter-point, many of the
500 Cuban doctors working in Haiti
have fanned out throughout Portau-
Prince, particularly in the massive
refugee camp that now covers
the Champ de Mars, the downtown
square. There they have set up small
clinics, identifi ed by a Cuban fl ag, to
tend to the earthquake’s many victims.
According to Dr. Evan Lyon
of Partners in Health, who is presently
administering the HUEH, some
40,000 to 50,000 people living in
the square benefi t greatly from this
aid. The Cuban doctors carry out their
work, without having to be guarded
by helmeted men with guns. “The
Cuban doctors are an intense resource,”
he said.
Meanwhile, at the Matthew 25
Hospitality House in Delmas 33, an
anecdote made the rounds among a
group of North American doctors living
there and caring for some 500
quake refugees camped out in a soccer
fi eld next door. They too manage
to deliver life-saving operations and
medical care without military guard.
Sister Mary Finnick, who runs the
house, told of an incoming doctor remarking
that he saw huge quantities
of guns being brought in through the
Mais Gaté Airport, which the U.S.
military has taken over and runs.
“They should be bringing more
gauze, not more guns,” quipped one
of the doctors. |